Artikler

Let’s make Paine’s Age of Reason a reality. By Frank Furedi (Spiked Review of Books, April 2014). Review of Yuval Levin, The Great Debate: Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine and the Birth of Right and Left (Basic Books, 2013, 275 p.))
“Burke’s paternalism won out over Paine’s liberalism. Let the fightback begin.”

A New World: A Life of Thomas Paine by Trevor Griffiths. Review by Ann Talbot (World Socialist Web Site, 18 September 2009)
“Trevor Griffith brings to the stage an 18th century figure who made a significant contribution to both the American and French revolutions and whose writings have continued to influence revolutionary movements ever since.”

Tom Paine, restless democrat. By Mike Marqusee (Red Pepper, June/July 2009)
“This June marks the bicentenary of the death of a man who was buried in obscurity but whose ideas are today claimed by everyone from anarchists to neoliberals. Mike Marqusee celebrates the life, work and ideas of the great revolutionary who declared that ”˜my country is the world and my religion is to do good’.”

Citizen of the world: a brief survey of the life and times of Thomas Paine. By Ann Talbot (World Socialist Web Site, 8 June 2009)
“Paine’s life story reflects the experience of a new social type: self-educated men from poor backgrounds who were making their way in industry, science and, in Paine’s case, politics. He was the most brilliant example of this new phenomenon.”

Tom Paine’s birthday: ‘To world revolution’. By Peter Linebaugh (CounterPunch, January 29, 2009)
“Though a revolutionary opposing kingship, one-man rule, the puppet-show of sovereignty, the war-making essential to monarchy, he was also opposed to capital punishment …”

Mightier than the sword – the impact of the ideas of Thomas Paine on the American Revolution. By Harry Whittaker (In Defence of Marxism, 28 March 2008)
“The year was 1776 and it was time for Americans to sever links with Britain and assert their independence. Thomas Paine set himself the task of writing what was to become the biggest-selling, most widely read and successful political pamphlet in history: Common Sense.

Doubting Thomas. By Joshua Wolf Shenk (Mother Jones, December 2005)
“Paine’s legacy – his physical remains as well as his ideological heritage – is the subject of two recent books.”

Citizen of the world : a brief survey of the life and times of Thomas Paine, 1737-1809. By Ann Talbot (World Socialist Web Site, 30 September 2004)
“Paine’s life story reflects the experience of a new social type: self-educated men from poor backgrounds who were making their way in industry, science and, in Paine’s case, politics. He was the most brilliant example of this new phenomenon.”

Living to some purpose. By Megan Trudell (International Socialism, Issue 69, Winter 1995)
“Paine’s is a life worth celebrating, and for that reason John Keane’s new biography is welcome. Keane is quite right to resurrect Paine – though his task is far from uncontroversial, as a hostile review of his biography by an Oxford don, Jonathan Clark, shows.”

Tom Paine – Revolutionist. By Jean Simon (Fourth International, Vol.13, No.2, March-April 1952)
“Paine opposed monarchy, slavery, poverty, organized religion and the Bible, and the unequal status of women. He was an advocate of universal education, reform of criminal law, pensions far the aged and other social security measures, reduction of armaments and universal peace.”